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SAS® Integration Technologies: Administrator's Guide (LDAP Version)

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This rule is true if the bind distinguished name is a member of the group that is specified by dn. You can<br />

specify more than one group. For example, if the rule is specified as groupdn = "ldap:///cn=managers,<br />

o=Alphalite Airways", the rule is true if the user's distinguished name is a member of the managers group.<br />

userdnattr<br />

This keyword uses the following expression:<br />

userdnattr = "ldap:///attribute"<br />

The rule is true if the bind distinguished name is the same as the distinguished name that is specified for<br />

attribute. As an example, consider a directory object that has uid=nking specified for the "manager" attribute<br />

and a bind rule that is specified as userdnattr = "ldap:///manager" User nking could bind to the directory and<br />

access the object because the bind distinguished name matches the value of the "manager" attribute.<br />

groupdnattr<br />

This keyword uses the following expressions:<br />

groupdnattr = "ldap:///attribute"<br />

The rule is true if the bind distinguished name is the same as the distinguished name that is specified for<br />

attribute. This operates identically to the userdnattr keyword, except that the attribute is specified on a group<br />

object.<br />

groupdnattr = "ldap:///dn?attribute"<br />

This rule is true if the bind distinguished name is the same as the distinguished name that is specified for<br />

attribute. The group must also be under the distinguished name that is specified by dn.<br />

ip<br />

This keyword uses the following expression:<br />

ip = "ip address"<br />

The rule is true if the user that is accessing the directory uses the specified IP address. You may use asterisks<br />

as wildcards. For example, ip = "10.15.67.*"<br />

dns<br />

This keyword uses the following expression:<br />

dns = "dns hostname"<br />

The rule is true if the user that is accessing the directory is located in the specified domain. You may use<br />

asterisks as wildcards. For example, dns = "*.alphalite.com"<br />

timeofday<br />

<strong>SAS®</strong> <strong>Integration</strong> <strong>Technologies</strong>: <strong>Administrator's</strong> <strong>Guide</strong> (<strong>LDAP</strong> <strong>Version</strong>)<br />

This keyword uses the following expression:<br />

timeofday operator "time"<br />

The rule is true if the time that the user accesses the directory matches the time that is specified in the rule.<br />

Specify time in 24−hour format (0 to 2359). Use the operator value to specify whether the access time should<br />

Specifying Bind Rules 236

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